# Twitch Copyright & Privacy: What's Legal When You Download (UrhG & GDPR)

> A plain-English guide to the copyright (UrhG) and data-protection (GDPR/DSGVO) questions around downloading Twitch videos — who owns the content, the private-copy idea, and where the lines are. Not legal advice.

_Updated: 2026-07-06_

## First: this is general information, not legal advice

Copyright and data-protection law is genuinely complicated, varies by country, and turns on the specifics of your situation. Nothing here is legal advice — it's a plain-English overview to help you understand the questions involved. For anything that actually matters, talk to a qualified lawyer (in Germany, a Rechtsanwalt).

With that said, most of the everyday confusion comes down to a few clear ideas, and understanding them helps you stay on the responsible side of the line.

## Who owns the content in a Twitch stream?

A stream is a stack of different rights. The streamer owns their own footage, commentary and camera. The game publisher owns the game's visuals and audio. Any background music belongs to its rights holders. And Twitch has its own Terms of Service governing what you can do on the platform. Downloading a VOD doesn't transfer any of those rights to you — you're making a copy of someone else's protected work.

That's the core principle in most jurisdictions, including under German copyright law (Urheberrecht, UrhG): creative content is protected by default, and the copyright holder decides how it may be used and shared.

## The private-copy idea (Privatkopie) under German law

German copyright law recognises a limited private-copy exception (§53 UrhG): individuals may generally make copies of a work for their own private, non-commercial use, within limits. This is the concept people usually mean when they say downloading "for personal use" is treated differently from redistributing.

But it's narrow and conditional — it does not permit copying from an obviously unlawful source, it doesn't allow circumventing effective technical protection measures, and it never extends to publishing, re-uploading or monetising the copy. Whether any specific download qualifies is exactly the kind of detail a lawyer, not a blog post, should judge.

## GDPR / DSGVO: streams and chat contain personal data

There's a second layer people forget: a Twitch VOD and its chat can contain personal data — faces, voices, usernames, messages. Under the EU's GDPR (in Germany, the DSGVO), processing other people's personal data has rules, especially if you go beyond purely private use and start publishing or sharing it.

For keeping a private copy for yourself, everyday private-use exemptions usually apply. The moment you republish a VOD or chat log containing identifiable people, you're processing their data in a way that can trigger obligations — another reason redistribution is where the real risk lives.

## Twitch's Terms of Service are separate from the law

It's worth separating two things: what the law allows, and what Twitch's Terms of Service allow. They're not the same. Twitch's ToS is a contract between you and Twitch; something can be permitted by law but still against the ToS, or vice versa. Downloading tools generally operate in the space of personal use, but you should read and respect Twitch's current Terms.

The honest summary: your own content and content you have permission to save are the safe cases; other people's content for private, personal use sits in the nuanced private-copy area; and redistributing or monetising anything you don't own is where problems clearly begin.

## Practical, responsible guidance

In plain terms: downloading your own VODs to archive them is the clearest case. Saving a public clip or VOD for genuinely private, personal use is the grey area the private-copy concept is about. Re-uploading, streaming publicly, or monetising someone else's content without permission is where you're most likely to be in the wrong — both under copyright and, if it contains personal data, under the DSGVO.

A tool being privacy-respecting doesn't change what you're allowed to download — that's on the user. vodfetch keeps no account and stores no downloads, and we're transparent about exactly how it works, but the responsibility to only save content you own or are permitted to save stays with you. When in doubt, ask a lawyer.

## How to download a Twitch video

1. **Prefer your own content** — Downloading and archiving your own past broadcasts is the clearest, safest case — you own the rights to your footage.
2. **Keep other people's content private** — If you save someone else's public VOD or clip, keep it for genuinely private, personal use. Don't treat a private copy as a licence to publish.
3. **Never re-upload or monetise what you don't own** — Publishing, re-streaming or making money from another creator's content without permission is where copyright — and, for personal data, the DSGVO — problems clearly start.
4. **When it matters, ask a lawyer** — For any real decision, get advice from a qualified lawyer (Rechtsanwalt). This guide is general information, not legal advice.

## Frequently asked questions

### Is it legal to download a Twitch VOD in Germany?

It depends on the source and what you do with it. German law recognises a limited private-copy exception (§53 UrhG) for personal, non-commercial use, but it doesn't cover unlawful sources, bypassing protections, or any form of republishing. This is general information, not legal advice — consult a Rechtsanwalt for specifics.

### What is the private-copy (Privatkopie) exception?

It's a provision in German copyright law (§53 UrhG) that generally lets individuals make copies of a work for private, non-commercial use, within limits. It does not permit copying from clearly illegal sources or publishing the copy.

### Does the GDPR / DSGVO apply to downloading Twitch videos?

It can. VODs and chat contain personal data (faces, voices, usernames, messages). Purely private use usually falls under everyday exemptions, but publishing or sharing content with identifiable people can trigger data-protection obligations.

### Can I upload a Twitch VOD I downloaded to YouTube?

Not without the rights. Re-uploading someone else's content without permission can infringe copyright, and if it contains other people's personal data it can also raise DSGVO issues. Uploading your own content, with any third-party music cleared, is the safe case.

